Protecting the Peruvian Amazon and its People From the Risks of Oil and Gas Development

Many Peruvian school children aren't taught that isolated indigenous groups live in the Amazon tropical forests of their country. Further, some mining and oil company officials continue to deny that these communities exist.

But indeed there are 482 indigenous communities in Peru's Amazon region -- 14 of which are completely isolated from any contact with the outside world.

While logging is the most serious threat to the livelihoods of indigenous communities (and most importantly, their continued isolation), the recent rise in oil prices has generated an investment boom in Peru's oil and gas sector. Many national and multinational corporations as well multilateral and private banks have responded quickly to this unprecedented financial opportunity, and the Peruvian government has allocated about 80 percent of the country's Amazon forests for oil and gas exploration.

Peru's official allocation process has been largely non-transparent and closed to public participation. Indeed, Peru is the last remaining country in Latin America without an independent environmental authority.

Within this context, WRI is announcing its new partnership with the Instituto del Bien Común (IBC). The partnership aims to protect sensitive ecosystems as well as the rights of indigenous communities with respect to policy decisions on resource development in the Amazon: particularly decisions made by government, industial, and the financial sector.

Many companies and governments still push projects through to completion without community consultation or approval. In many cases, they believe their actions are justified, perhaps even in the public interest. Yet among affected communities, the ripple effects from such action don't dissipate quickly.